[65]
The matter, I know not how, got to his ears.
For the king had wished it kept entirely concealed; not because he feared or
suspected anything, but because he did not wish many to feast their eyes on it
before the Roman people. He begs the king, and entreats him most earnestly to send
it to him; he says that he longs to look at it himself, and that he will not allow
any one else to see it. Antiochus, being both of a childlike and royal disposition,
suspected nothing of that man's dishonesty, and orders his servants to take it as
secretly as possible, and well wrapped up, to the praetor's house. And when they
brought it there, and placed it on a table, having taken off the coverings, Verres
began to exclaim that it was a thing worthy of the kingdom of Syria, worthy of being a royal present, worthy of
the Capitol. In truth, it was of such splendour as a thing must be which is made of
the most brilliant and beautiful jewels; of such variety of pattern that the skill
of the workmanship seemed to vie with the richness of the materials; and of such a
size that it might easily be seen that it had been made not for the furniture of
men, but for the decoration of a most noble temple. And when he appeared to have
examined it sufficiently, the servants begin to take it up to carry it back again.
He says that he wishes to examine it over and over again; that he is not half
satiated with the sight of it; he orders them to depart and to leave the
candelabrum. So they then return to Antiochus empty-handed.
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